Or, why on earth did American plumbing ever adopt these Rube Goldberg remote-operated stopper contraptions in sinks and bathtubs, when a simple rubber stopper does the job perfectly well? A rubber stopper usually seals better, doesn't fill up the drainpipe with bits and pieces and levers and linkages for stuff to catch on and clog the drain, and there's virtually nothing that can go wrong with it. Anything that CAN go wrong with a rubber stopper, you can fix for maybe a buck spent at the hardware store, perhaps even the hardware section at the supermarket, and probably without tools. When one of these over-complicated remote-linkage slow-leak devices goes wrong — which they do frequently — the vast majority of people need to call a plumber.¹
Ah, but the chrome-plated remote-linkage gubbins is SHINY! Doesn't work reliably, sure, but it's really SHINY!
[1] Come to think of it, that's probably a big part of the reason....
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